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Prize Winner
Professor James TourFor innovations in materials chemistry, with applications in medicine and nanotechnology.
Prize Winner
Professor Leigh CanhamFor pioneering work in silicon quantum dots and contributions to practical applications of silicon nanostructures in the electronics, photonics and biomedical fields.
Prize Winner
Professor Melanie SanfordFor the development of catalytic C–H functionalization reactions and their applications in organic synthesis.
Prize Winner
Teri OdomFor seminal work on multi-scale materials that enable new ways to achieve ultrafast, coherent, and directional light emission at the nanoscale.
Prize Winner
Paul DysonFor major advances in the catalytic transformations of renewable substrates leading to industrial processes and products.
Prize Winner
Professor Rachel O'ReillyFor creative and comprehensive syntheses of functional, self-assembling polymeric materials.
Prize Winner
Professor Richard CatlowFor the development and application of computational methods in conjunction with experiment as powerful and predictive tools in the physical chemistry of solids.
Prize Winner
Professor Vernon GibsonFor seminal contributions to fundamental and applied inorganic chemistry, and for critical work in policy setting at the interface of academia with industry and government.
Prize Winner
Professor Klaus MüllenFor developing novel nanomaterials for single-molecule applications, organic electronics, sensing, catalysis, bio-labelling and energy conversion.
Prize Winner
Professor Madhavi KrishnanFor the invention of a ‘field free’ trap for confining and manipulating a single colloidal particle or molecule, enabling accurate and precise measurements of molecular charge in aqueous solution.
Prize Winner
Melanie CooperFor outstanding accomplishments in designing, implementing and evaluating evidence-based chemistry curricula and catalysing the careers of many chemistry education researchers.
Prize Winner
Professor Nicholas LongFor innovative synthetic chemistry applied to the fields of functional materials and biomedical imaging.
Prize Winner
Professor Jianliang XiaoFor outstanding contributions to catalysis, both in fundamental studies and commercial application.
Prize Winner
Professor John HepworthFor outstanding service to the Å·ÃÀAV through our Local Sections, governance committees and Board of Trustees.
Prize Winner
Steven ArmesFor sustained and pioneering contributions to the design and synthesis of novel biocompatible polymers.
Prize Winner
Professor William GriffithFor outstanding service to the Å·ÃÀAV through our Historical Group and for advising on activities celebrating the history of the chemical sciences.
Prize Winner
Iseult LynchFor enhanced understanding of the role of biomolecule-nanomaterials interactions and the ecological corona in environmental fate and toxicity of nanomaterials.
Prize Winner
Professor Jeffrey LongFor pioneering work in the synthesis and characterization of inorganic molecules and materials exhibiting new physical phenomena.
Prize Winner
Professor Sjoerd HarderFor pioneering contributions in the field of s-block metal chemistry, particularly in the area of alkaline earth metal catalysis.
Prize Winner
Vy DongFor creative applications of metal hydride catalysis to address diverse challenges in organic synthesis, including carbon-carbon activation and cyclic peptide construction.